Note further, JohnR7 is incapable of offering an alternate mechanism of genotype or phenotype differentiation.
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gladiatrix said:Let's start with the just this very incomplete list of evidence here in these links:
Six lines of evidence, one conclusion...evolution ain't going away
Or how about reviewing some of the evidence for human evolution and taking Scigirl's Chromosome Challenge?(Post #96)
Let's see you give a reasoned argument to the contrary against any part of the the above.
jamie4418 said:Question for the evolutionists. Even if evolution is true (which I don't believe), God still created all life, didn't He?
jamie4418 said:Question for the evolutionists. Even if evolution is true (which I don't believe), God still created all life, didn't He?
jamie4418 said:As evolutionists, do you believe life just came from nowhere?
jamie4418 said:As evolutionists, do you believe life just came from nowhere?
So, what you're saying is that you believe the entire universe, in its vast magnificence, not to mention all life on earth, is one big accident?JedPerkins said:Evolutionists can believe in a god, or gods, you know. I personally don't, and think that life arose from the right processes coming together at random in this incredibly vast universe (understanding the vastness of the universe I think is key in understanding my position).
jamie4418 said:So, what you're saying is that you believe the entire universe, in its vast magnificence, not to mention all life on earth, is one big accident?
jamie4418 said:So, what you're saying is that you believe the entire universe, in its vast magnificence, not to mention all life on earth, is one big accident?
I find the possibilities surrounding the birth of the universe to be rather fascinating. The theory of cosmic inflation allows one comparatively small accident to initiate the birth of a new universe. Unfortunately we probably won't ever be able to probe physics to that scale to ever test the causes of our own universe: the furthest we can possibly probe is the end of inflation, there is no known way to probe for the beginning.Nathan Poe said:Or a series of little accidents.
(P.S. This has nothing to do with evolution.)
Questions for evolutionists:
1) Did humans come from apes?
jamie4418 said:2) Are humans more evolved than apes?
jamie4418 said:3) Did all life come from amoeba?
jamie4418 said:4) Where did amoeba come from?
Questions for evolutionists:
1) Did humans come from apes?
2) Are humans more evolved than apes?
3) Did all life come from amoeba?
4) Where did amoeba come from?
Yes. We speciated from the ancestors of the chimpanzees about 5-6 million years ago. This doesn't say that we came from the apes of today. It states that the apes of today and ourselves share common ancestors.Questions for evolutionists:
1) Did humans come from apes?
How do you define more evolved? We're certainly more intelligent, but is that necessarily more evolved? I suppose one might possibly say that we are the most evolved of the apes (since we share ancestors from them, we really are still apes, just as we are mammals), considering that we are the only among the apes to begin accelerated social evolution (the social structures of other apes have remained largely unchanged for millions of years, while our societies are changing on the order of decades).2) Are humans more evolved than apes?
Well, not amoeba. Amoeba are just one form of single-celled organism. But I assume you mean that all multicellular life came from single-celled life.3) Did all life come from amoeba?
http://www.gate.net/~rwms/EvoMutations.htmlStarting from single celled animals, each of which has the capability to reproduce there is no sex in the sense that we think of the term. Selective pressure has been observed to convert single-cellular forms into multicellular forms. A case was observed in which a single celled form changed to multicellularity.
Boxhorn, a student of Boraas,writes: Coloniality in Chlorella vulgaris
Boraas (1983) reported the induction of multicellularity in a strain of Chlorella pyrenoidosa (since reclassified as C. vulgaris) by predation. He was growing the unicellular green alga in the first stage of a two stage continuous culture system as for food for a flagellate predator, Ochromonas sp., that was growing in the second stage. Due to the failure of a pump, flagellates washed back into the first stage. Within five days a colonial form of the Chlorella appeared. It rapidly came to dominate the culture. The colony size ranged from 4 cells to 32 cells. Eventually it stabilized at 8 cells. This colonial form has persisted in culture for about a decade. The new form has been keyed out using a number of algal taxonomic keys. They key out now as being in the genus Coelosphaerium, which is in a different family from Chlorella. "
Boraas, M. E. 1983. Predator induced evolution in chemostat culture. EOS. Transactions of the American Geophysical Union. 64:1102.
from Observed Instances of Speciation
Now that is a very interesting subject, and isn't really evolution, but rather the discipline of abiogenesis. Here's a basic, basic idea of abiogenesis:4) Where did amoeba come from?
Questions for evolutionists:
1) Did humans come from apes?
2) Are humans more evolved than apes?
3) Did all life come from amoeba?
4) Where did amoeba come from?